The
shrill conservative Ann Coulter has made headlines because the
University of California, Berkeley, wouldn’t let her speak at
the end of April. Invited by college Republicans, her appearance
threatened to incite violence, as activists on the left and on the
right prepared to either protest or support her appearance. In the
end, the University canceled her appearance, saying it could not
guarantee her safety, which has the effect of providing the notorious
loudmouth an enlarged platform. National news programs have featured
Coulter yammering about the anti-immigration speech she might have
given. And credible, national newspapers like the New York Times and
the Washington Post have both covered the issue on its news pages,
but also printed opinion pieces about the disturbing trend of violent
protests when conservative speakers – the Manhattan Institute’s
Heather McDonald, and Bell Curve author and racist provocateur
Charles Murray among them – are invited to campuses.
Who’s
afraid of a shrill conservative? Liberals shouldn’t be. Sure,
people like Ann Coulter deserve to be protested. But they also
deserve to be heard. Protest can take many forms. Students who
oppose the Coulter blather can peacefully gather outside a venue
where she is speaking with picket signs highlighting their points.
They can peacefully attend her lecture and attempt to ask questions
after her lecture. They can take to community forums – from
radio and television to campus newspapers, to articulate their
opposition to her views. They can stage counter events – how
about a pro-immigration speaker scheduled at exactly the same time as
the Coulter lecture, where opposition attendance is exponentially
larger than hers. Or, they can simply ignore her presence on campus.
Cancelling
her appearance gives her more exposure than she deserves. It is also
a form of censorship that cuts both ways. At Claremont McKenna
College, police brutality defender Heather McDonald gave her talk via
live stream because college administrators feared violence if there
was a large audience. Protesters banged on the windows in the room
where she gave her talk, making it difficult to hear her. How would
those of us that support the Black Lives Matter movement respond if
BLM leaders were treated the same way McDonald was? And aren’t
BLM supporters capable of responding to McDonald’s nonsense?
Universities
are supposed to be places where minds are opened and ideas are
exchanged. If provocative speakers can’t visit a university,
who can? And where better to hear ideas, no matter how offensive,
than at a university lecture or forum. I’d not like to have
Heather McDonald or Ann Coulter as a commencement speaker. In a
celebratory space it would be positively offensive to have students
of color be forced to share their big day with those who would
implicitly deny their very right to exist. But I see no harm in
having folks like McDonald, Coulter, or Murray speak on campus.
Indeed, it is perhaps most effective to have them debate some of
those who disagree with them. I once had the pleasure of rebutting
Charles Murray after one of his Bell Curve talks. This happened more
than a decade ago, but I’d like to think I handed his words
back to him with aplomb. If the applause meter was any indication, I
wiped the stage with him. If my memory serves me right, Murray
refused a one-on-one debate proposing, instead, that he would give
his talk and I could rebut it. On another occasion, I was initially
contracted to debate the anti-affirmative action activist Ward
Connerly. He slithered out of the debate, and even refused to appear
on a panel with me. No matter. I used his printed words as a basis
for refuting his flawed arguments against affirmative action. I
share these instances not to toot my own horn, but to suggest that
when conservatives are intellectually confronted by principled
opposition, they often fold. On the other hand, when they don’t
even get a chance to talk, they get to play victim to a larger
audience.
Who’s
afraid of shrill shills like Ann Coulter and Heather McDonald?
Liberal and progressive students shouldn’t be. Odious
conservatives like these should be protested in an orderly way,
debated, and debunked. There is no way they should be prevented from
speaking. There is nothing frightening about them or their ideas.
When they talk, it becomes quite clear that they are wrong,
misguided, and narrow-minded. But when they are silenced, their
ideas take on an importance that they hardly deserve.
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